Word: dunlap
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...Black '30; A. W. Brown '30; P. S. Brown '30; F. T. Burgess '30; L. H. Butterfield '30; D. K. Carroll '30; G. A. Chaffee '30: Joseph Cohen '30; C. W. Colman '30; C. M. Cooper '30; J. L. Cushwa '30; A. C. Daniels '30; C. M. Dunlap '30; Martin Freedman '30; R. G. Gould Jr. 30; J. R. Graham '30; G. T. L. M. de la Groudiere '30; Frank Hada '30; W. S. Hardie '30; F. F. Hart '30; Frederick Hawkins '30; B. A. Herman '30; L. T. Hurwitz '30; R. W. Hyde '30; J. A. Jarosi...
...summary of the balloting follows: President R. L. Summers 1402 T. F. Mason 1640 W. D. Vogel 1669 G. L. Lewis 1735 F. B. Thurber 2138 Guthrie Willard 2235 Vice-President A. L. Devens 1334 D. L. Waterman 1460 Bernard Barnes 1513 C. E. Dunlap 1691 F. P. Kinnicutt 1734 Secretary-Treasurer James Roosevelt 1296 H. T. Holbrook 1366 H. T. Wenner 1670 J. T. Baldwin 1748 A. R. Maynard...
...petition to the list of nominees. Gardner Lathrop Lewis of Swampscott and Guthrie Willard of New York City have been nominated for President, and Howard Theodore Wenner of Northampton, Pa., has been nominated for Secretary Treasurer. Thomas Frothingham Mason of Brooklyn has been nominated for President and Charles Edward Dunlap has been nominated for Vice-President. In yesterday's Crimson the nominations of these two men were erroneously confused with each other...
Charles Edward Dunlap of Scarsdale, N. Y., has been nominated for President, Bernard Barnes of New Hartford, Conn., and Thomas Frothingham Mason of Brooklyn, N. Y., have been nominated for Vice-President. The elections will be held tomorrow and not on Saturday as previously announced...
There in the flesh were men whose names stand for houses: Lippincott, McBride, Dorrance, Burt, Brace (but not Harcourt), job-riding merrily together to Grosset (without Dunlap). There was many another publisher or his trusted lieutenant, like shrewd young George Brett Jr., representing the comparatively vast Macmillan interests. One and all were making a junket out of a serious Washington to appear en masse at public hearings of the Patents Committee of the House of Representatives on a subject close to the hearts of all U.S. authors, song writers, scenarists, printers, librarians, dramatists, actors, librettists and bookbinders whatever, but most...